I Survived

By: A&E / PodcastOne
  • Summary

  • What is it like to face death and make it out alive? Based on the groundbreaking A&E television series, I Survived documents harrowing stories of human endurance. In their own words, survivors recall how they overcame unbelievable circumstances that changed their lives forever.
    Copyright © 2002-2025 PodcastOne.com. All rights reserved.
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Episodes
  • I'm locked up like a dog. I can't escape
    Jan 6 2025

    A heart-wrenching drama unfolds when a man struggles to save himself and his family from drowning in frigid waters, and a female prison officer uses her strength and quick thinking skills to stay alive during the
    longest prison siege in U.S. history.

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    45 mins
  • Shut That Door Again or You Don't Survive
    Dec 30 2024

    Two students and a professor at Virginia Tech University manage to survive the April 16, 2007, massacre at the school. A Minneapolis school bus with 52 children plummets 45 feet when a bridge collapses in August 2007.


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    43 mins
  • History This Week Preview: Nosferatu Rises Again (feat. Robert Eggers)
    Dec 24 2024

    **For this History This Week special feature, Sally interviews director Robert Eggers about his new historically inspired film, Nosferatu.**

    Winter, 1476. Vlad III is a prince in Wallachia, in present-day Romania. He is a violent man, so violent that he earns the nickname "Vlad the Impaler." He also has another name that he inherited from his father: Dracula.

    Dracula is constantly fighting for his crown, but today, that fight will come to an end. His headless body will be discovered in a marsh, stuck down by his enemies. But his legend will live on.

    Dracula pops up in stories throughout Europe over the next few centuries, until author Bram Stoker decides to combine this legend with the latest fictional craze, vampires. His book, Dracula, becomes the king of the genre. It inspires numerous adaptations, including a silent film called Nosferatu. It's considered one of the most important horror movies in history.

    Over 100 years later, director Robert Eggers has reimagined the original Nosferatu and adapted it for a modern audience. In a conversation with Eggers, we asked, how did he make a blood-sucking monster feel like a historical figure? And where do vampires fit into our lives today?

    Special thanks to Robert Eggers, director of Nosferatu. We also used a great book to help research this episode, Dracula: Prince of Many Faces, by Radu Florescu and Raymond McNally.

    To stay updated: historythisweekpodcast.com

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    Less than 1 minute

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